byronic :: mad bad and dangerous to know

Quote Post
We shall have to adapt ourselves to the shadowy screen and to the cold machine. A new form of writing will be necessary. I have thought of that and I can feel what is coming. But I rather like it. This swift change of scene, this blending of emotion and experience … in life, too, changes and transitions flash before our eyes, and emotions of the soul are like a hurricane. The cinema has divined the mystery of motion. And that is greatness.

Leo Tolstoy discussing cinema with Isaak Teneromo in August 1908, as reported in the New York Times on January 31st 1937.

The article also reports that Tolstoy was planning to write “a play for the screen” likely to have “a terrible and bloody theme.”

I really rather wish Tolstoy had written a horror film - and that he could have lived to see Das Cabinet des Doktor Caligari. He would have loved it.

(quote via confusionis - my notes)

via catherinewillisView Comments
Posted on Tuesday, December 13, 2011. Tagged with: Lev Tolstoycinemathe mystery of motionlike a hurricane
206
Notes
  1. caducei liked this
  2. jacobcharleswilson reblogged this from laura-anne-w
  3. franflow liked this
  4. community788 liked this
  5. drawingswithlight reblogged this from byronic
  6. athousandvoicestalk liked this
  7. obscuredylansongs liked this
  8. elizabethsaari liked this
  9. rich-kid-blues liked this
  10. gloomy-sunday liked this
  11. 8bitkiwi reblogged this from jessicaxpetunia
  12. dreamszoo liked this
  13. ofthegirl22 liked this
  14. lost-time liked this
  15. unpalombaro liked this
  16. thisawfulbliss liked this
  17. singfoolsing liked this
  18. mollypeck liked this
  19. magpie23 liked this
  20. whatmakespistachionuts liked this
  21. m1603 liked this
  22. threekelvin liked this
  23. postmodernmarvel reblogged this from thesummerofmark
  24. superfluidity liked this
  25. yama-bato liked this
  26. some-velvet-morning liked this
  27. ixthil liked this
  28. thesummerofmark liked this
  29. thesummerofmark reblogged this from unfinishedsentence
  30. kholinar liked this
  31. joshuarobertlong liked this
  32. thehandshake reblogged this from smriti
  33. riesje liked this
  34. riesje reblogged this from naomijade
  35. hurricanesarekisses liked this
  36. toniiu liked this
  37. guyhohmann liked this
  38. themarcoharder liked this
  39. hlewisallways liked this
  40. iwillnotsuckyou reblogged this from wreckandsalvage
  41. anelvindream liked this
  42. noxrpm liked this
  43. peacefulslumber91 liked this
  44. thehunchbacklamp liked this
  45. halsf liked this
  46. confusionis posted this

Comments powered by Disqus

byronic :: mad bad and dangerous to know About Me
I love films, baseball, whales, good food, and guys in ties.
I teach literature, film and cultural studies at university.
I worship at the Church of Springsteen.
Sometimes I write reviews.
You may now also call me Doctor.

Byronic
[bai'ra:-nik] 1. Characteristic of, or after the manner of Byron or his poetry. 2. quasi-n. pl. [after Philippics.] Declamatory utterances or invectives in the style of Byron. 3. Byronic hero: prominent literary character type of the Romantic period, whose characteristics include: extraordinary intelligence and perception; high level of education and intellectual prowess; arrogance; cunning and manipulation; emotional conflictedness; moodiness; self-criticism and introspection; self-destructive behaviour; aesthetic sophistication; dark mysterious beauty; powers of attraction; seductiveness and sexual perversion; world-weariness; distaste for social institutions and norms; disrespect of social ranks; being an outcast, an outlaw, or an exile.

Contact

Ask me a question
Send me your Guys in Ties

My Other Homes
Flickr
Flavors.me
JunkiePop
Movies in Frames
No Borders Magazine
Fuck Yeah Bruce Springsteen
Previous Next